Center Back · Updated 2026-05-20

Aerial Duels: How Many Per 90 Does a D1 Center Back Need?

D1 women's soccer starting center backs win 4.8 aerial duels per 90 minutes on average, with a standard deviation of 1.2. D2 starters win 3.5 per 90; D3 starters 2.5 per 90. The number recruiters actually evaluate is the volume of wins, not the win percentage — but a CB below 4.0 wins per 90 at D1-level competition has to compensate elsewhere on the profile.

The headline numbers

Aerial duels won per 90 — NCAA women's soccer center backs, starter sample
DivisionMean (μ)σ (D1)68% range
D14.801.203.60 – 6.00
D23.501.20 (proxy)2.30 – 4.70
D32.501.20 (proxy)1.30 – 3.70

The gap between D1 and D3 means is 2.3 wins per 90 — meaningful but smaller than the gap on raw goal-scoring at forward. Aerial-duel volume is partly opponent-driven (how often the opposition crosses or goes long), so a CB at a possession-dominant program reads "low" without being weaker.

Why volume matters more than win-rate alone

A CB winning 5 of 5 aerial duels per game looks dominant — 100%. A CB winning 8 of 11 looks worse — 73%. The first profile is being protected (opponents stopped going at her); the second is being tested and winning a high count. Coaches read both numbers, but volume is what they evaluate first. A 73% rate on high volume gets a recruiting call. A 100% rate on 2 attempts per game prompts a "we'll watch more film" reply.

The published win-rate proxy on the center back benchmarks page is the all-duels success rate — 62.5% at D1 mean. That's combined air + ground. Aerial-specific win rate runs slightly lower for most CBs because the duel is harder to influence with positioning alone — about 55–62% is the typical aerial-specific band for D1 starters.

The competition multiplier matters here too

A center back at ECNL National winning 5.5 aerials per 90 is winning against athletes who can challenge her. A center back winning 7.0 per 90 in HS varsity is mostly winning against athletes who can't get off the ground. The competition multiplier (ECNL National 1.00, GA 0.95, ECRL/DPL 0.80, NPL 0.70, HS varsity 0.65) applies to aerial volume too.

Worked example: a CB at 4.5 aerial wins per 90 in ECRL (multiplier 0.80) projects to 3.6 wins per 90 in D1-equivalent terms — below the D1 mean but inside the D2 band. That's an honest evaluation. Same player at 4.5 wins per 90 in ECNL National = 4.5 D1-equivalent — squarely D1.

When aerial volume is structural, not skill

Three structural factors that move aerial volume independent of the player:

Coaches who watch the film read past these. The number on the stat sheet matters; the role on the team matters more.

How to compute aerial volume correctly

What we see at intake

Aerial duels are the most under-counted CB stat at intake. Families remember goals and dramatic clearances; they rarely tally contested headers across a season. Across the Brava CB sample, the coach-verified aerial-duel count averages 47% higher than family self-report, with the gap reaching 80%+ on roughly one in four submissions. The clean number, properly counted, is the single easiest stat-line upgrade on a CB profile — and the upgrade is honest, not inflated: it's the number the club coach was prepared to defend all along.

Want her aerial volume benchmarked?

A Brava profile publishes coach-verified contested-aerial wins per 90 with the competition multiplier applied, and prints the Z-score against the target division. Defendable on a phone call with a college coach.

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